GET HELP NOW!
CALL TOLL FREE
1-888-774-2345

Thu, 9 February 2012

Home arrow News arrow Latest News arrow Methamphetamine Facts
Main Menu

Most Read
Effects & Symptoms of Heroin Use
Symptoms of Cocaine Use
History of Methamphetamine
Effects of Ecstasy
What is Methamphetamine?


We have 155 guests online

Our Newsfeed Link
Get our latest news
direct to your desktop!

Fullposts & Excerpts
0.91 FormatRSS FullPostsRSS ExcerptsRSS 1.0 FeedRSS 2.0 FeedATOM FeedOPML Feedhttp://add.my.yahoo.com/rss?url=http%3A//www.friendsofnarconon.org/drug_education/index2.php%3Foption%3Dcom_rssxt%26type%3DRSS1.0%26no_html%3D1

Methamphetamine Facts   PDF  Print  Email 

Methamphetamine is an addictive stimulant drug that strongly activates certain systems in the brain.

Methamphetamine is chemically related to amphetamine, but the central nervous system effects of methamphetamine are greater.

Methamphetamine is made in illegal laboratories and has a high potential for abuse and addiction.

Street methamphetamine is referred to by many names, such as "speed," "meth," and "chalk."

Methamphetamine hydrochloride, clear chunky crystals resembling ice, which can be inhaled by smoking, is referred to as "ice," "crystal," "glass," and "tina."

Health Hazards

Methamphetamine releases high levels of the neurotransmitter dopamine, which stimulates brain cells, enhancing mood and body movement. It also appears to have a neurotoxic effect, damaging brain cells that contain dopamine as well as serotonin, another neurotransmitter.

Over time, methamphetamine appears to cause reduced levels of dopamine, which can result in symptoms like those of Parkinson’s disease, a severe movement disorder.

Methamphetamine is taken orally or intranasally (snorting the powder), by intravenous injection, and by smoking.

Immediately after smoking or intravenous injection, the methamphetamine user experiences an intense sensation, called a “rush” or “flash,” that lasts only a few minutes and is described as extremely pleasurable.

Oral or intranasal use produces euphoria—a high, but not a rush. Users may become addicted quickly, and use it with increasing frequency and in increasing doses.

Animal research going back more than 20 years shows that high doses of methamphetamine damage neuron cell endings. Dopamine- and serotonin-containing neurons do not die after methamphetamine use, but their nerve endings (“terminals”) are cut back, and regrowth appears to be limited.

The central nervous system (CNS) actions that result from taking even small amounts of methamphetamine include increased wakefulness, increased physical activity, decreased appetite, increased respiration, hyperthermia, and euphoria.

Other CNS effects include irritability, insomnia, confusion, tremors, convulsions, anxiety, paranoia, and aggressiveness. Hyperthermia and convulsions can result in death.

Methamphetamine causes increased heart rate and blood pressure and can cause irreversible damage to blood vessels in the brain, producing strokes.

Other effects of methamphetamine include respiratory problems, irregular heartbeat, and extreme anorexia.

Its use can result in cardiovascular collapse and death.


News and Topics of Interest
The abuse of prescription drugs has increased dramatically in recent years, with marked increases in the abuse of some of the online pharmacies' best-selling products, such as narcotic painkillers and anxiety drugs like Valium. Hydrocodone, the active ingredient in Vicodin, Lortab and Lorcet, seems to have seen the biggest jump in usage. In its annual drug use survey, the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration found prescription drugs were second in popularity only to marijuana among substance abusers last year. In 2002, some 6.2 million Americans - 2.6 percent of the population 12 and over - were nonmedical users of prescription drugs, meaning they had abused drugs at least once in the month before taking part in the SAMHSA survey.

 
GET HELP NOW!
CALL TOLL FREE: 1-888-774-2345

Copyright © 1995-2012 Friends of Narconon, Intl.  All Rights Reserved.
Narconon, the Narconon logo, and the Narconon "Jumping Man" logo
are trademarks and service marks owned by Association for Better Living
and Education International and are used with its permission.

Website sponsored by Get the Smart Spam Filter - Mailbox Filter
Get the Smart Spam Filter!